Master of Chemistry

A Master of Chemistry (or MChem) degree is a specific master's degree for courses in the field of Chemistry.

United Kingdom

In the UK, the M.Chem degree is an undergraduate award, available after pursuing a four-year course of study at a university. It is classed as a level 7 qualification in the National Qualifications Framework.

In Scotland the M.Chem degree is a 5-year course.

Structure

In terms of course structure, M.Chem degrees have the same content that is usually seen in other degree programmes, i.e. lectures, laboratory work, coursework and exams each year. There are also usually one or more substantial projects undertaken in the fourth year, which may well have research elements. At the end of the second or third years, there is usually a threshold of academic performance in examinations to be reached to allow progression into the final year. Final results are awarded on the standard British undergraduate degree classification scale.


gollark: I mean, I think it would be more reasonable to say "murdering them is wrong" directly, but thing.
gollark: Well, it seems like you're being reasonable.
gollark: Do you mean in that specific case or that sort of thing in general?
gollark: At the cost of a mere 1263183189631863186931976391631792693693619628 CPU.
gollark: I am trying to debug some incomprehensible websocketuous issues in RSAPI.
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.